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Queens College House Plans Collection

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: SCA-0007

Contents of Collection

This collection documents the origins, organization, and activities of Queens College house plans, social organizations that were active and popular in the campus from the 1950s to the 1970s. It includes textual materials like membership booklets and newspapers that depict the history of the house plans and profile the unique characters of the different groups. Also included are party programs and invitations, ticket stubs, and group photographs that show the social activities and theatrical efforts the house plans organized. There are also membership buttons, pins, and sweatshirts that reveal how the house plans identified and promoted themselves in the campus.

Dates

  • circa 1956-1971

Language of Materials

Materials entirely in English.

Conditions Governing Access

Appointments to examine materials must be made in advance. Please e-mail qc.archives@qc.cuny.edu for more information or to schedule an appointment.

Conditions Governing Use

Reproductions may be provided to users to support research and scholarship. However, collection use is subject to all copyright laws. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.

Historical Note

House plans were social organizations for men or women that were active and popular in Queens College in the late fifties to the early seventies. Conceived to be more inclusive alternatives to fraternities or sororities, house plans did not require pledging or a large budget to join. Any student can apply to one or many different house plans. Any student can also start one by organizing fifteen students, getting a faculty advisor, and forming a constitution. And while many house plans did rent houses or apartments, those houses or apartments were used as meeting and recreational places and not as residence for its members.

House plans originated in the 1930s at City College and then spread to other campuses. While it is not clear when exactly house plans began at Queens College, there were enough house plans in the campus by 1947 that representatives from several of them formed the coordinating body called the Central House Plan (CHP) that year.

By the late sixties, there were over five hundred house plans in New York City. Besides Queens College, they were in other CUNY campuses like Brooklyn College, Queensborough Community College, and Hunter College. They were also in other New York institutions like Long Island University and Pace College, as well as schools in other states, like UCLA, University of Connecticut, and University of Pennsylvania.

In 1966, Queens College hosted a meeting of representatives from house plans in other campuses. It was in this meeting that the Metropolitan House Plan Association (MHPA) was formed and the Queens College CHP President Richard Branciforte was elected president. Like the CHP, the MHPA was conceived as a coordinating body for house plans in various campuses in the entire city.

About sixty house plans were active in Queens College at that point, and several more were formed within the decade. Organizing and hosting dances, sports events, theatrical and musical shows, charity drives, and field trips, house plans provided their members “a unified program of social, recreational, athletic, and cultural activities for their members.” For many alumni of this period, house plans led them to political and social engagement, creative expression, deep and lasting friendships, and, for some, romantic relationships and even marriages.

Source:

No pledging required: Open houses. Queens: The Magazine of Queens College, 21(1), 12-13.

Extent

3.5 Linear Feet (one records carton; one document case; three flat boxes; and one freestanding trophy)

Abstract

House plans were social organizations for men or women that were active in Queens College and other CUNY campuses in the 1960s. This collection includes a variety of Queens College house plans memorabilia like pins, buttons, and photographs. It also includes print ephemera like party programs and invitations, ticket stubs, and newspaper clippings.

Arrangement of Materials

Materials have been arranged into series based on the different house plans. Central House Plan, the coordinating body, is listed first and the different house plans are listed in alphabetical order.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

In the summer of 2018, a campaign to solicit memorabilia of house plans members was initiated by the Office of Alumni Relations. This initial batch of materials formed the basis of an exhibit at the Benjamin S. Rosenthal Library in fall 2018 in conjunction with the Homecoming Festival. A second solicitation for materials resulted in additional donations over the spring and summer of 2019.

List of Donors

  1. Mark Aaronson
  2. Ellen Adalman (née Hecht)
  3. Renee Addario (née Rzesniowiecki)
  4. Eileen Backofen
  5. Don Blauweiss
  6. Paul Cohen
  7. Michael Criss
  8. Bernard Dworkin
  9. Daniel Feldman
  10. Joel Friedman
  11. Susan Glaser
  12. Maxine Golding (née Osdoby)
  13. Sandra Greene
  14. Ivan Hametz
  15. Marilyn Hametz (née Weinstein)
  16. Allen Hausman
  17. Peter Horne
  18. Michael Kail
  19. Nikita Koulichkov
  20. Reva Levy (née Rand)
  21. Susan Lipton (née Yagoda)
  22. Carol Minov (née Berg)
  23. Barbara Patigalia (née Roth)
  24. Bobbie Phillips (née Rothman)
  25. Marie Sacco (née Franchina)
  26. Anita Saffran
  27. Richard Schecter
  28. Norm Schwartz
  29. Rhea Schwartz (née Bernstein)
  30. Susan Smolin (née Marmor)
  31. Ellen Weingart (née Moses)
  32. Marshall Wise

Related Materials

Queens Memory interviewed alumni Richard Branciforte and Ellen Weingart about their time at Queens College and experience with house plans. Ellen Weingart’s interview is available at https://queenslibrary.aviaryplatform.com/collections/21/collection_resources/17516 and Richard Branciforte’s is at https://queenslibrary.aviaryplatform.com/collections/21/collection_resources/25383. (Queens Memory, a joint project of Queens College and Queens Library, collects and archives oral histories about the borough of Queens.)

The City College of New York includes the House Plan Associations in the Finding Aid for the CCNY Alumni Association and for CCNY’s Affiliate Association.

Hunter College includes the House Plan Association in the Hunter College Student Clubs, Organizations and Publications Collection 1871–2016 Finding Aid .

Brooklyn College has a finding aid for the Dwight-White House Plan and a digital version of the Euclid House Plan Scrapbook.

Processing Information

Materials from multiple donors have been integrated by the archivist into a single collection for ease of access.

Source

Title
Queens College House Plans Collection
Author
Patricia Reguyal
Date
January 2020
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Repository Details

Part of the Queens College (New York, N.Y.) Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
Queens College Library, CUNY
Benjamin Rosenthal Library RO317
65-30 Kissena Boulevard
Flushing 11367 USA us